2017-01-24 21:43:02 -05:00
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// Copyright 2017 The Gitea Authors. All rights reserved.
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2022-11-27 13:20:29 -05:00
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
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2017-01-24 21:43:02 -05:00
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package util
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2018-02-20 07:50:42 -05:00
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import (
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2019-11-12 21:27:11 -05:00
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"bytes"
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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"crypto/rand"
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2023-04-03 12:58:09 -04:00
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"fmt"
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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"math/big"
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2021-10-12 14:11:35 -04:00
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"strconv"
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2018-05-28 23:51:42 -04:00
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"strings"
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2022-05-10 17:55:54 -04:00
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2024-02-22 21:18:33 -05:00
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"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/optional"
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2022-05-10 17:55:54 -04:00
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"golang.org/x/text/cases"
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"golang.org/x/text/language"
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2018-02-20 07:50:42 -05:00
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)
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2024-02-29 13:52:49 -05:00
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// OptionalBoolParse get the corresponding optional.Option[bool] of a string using strconv.ParseBool
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func OptionalBoolParse(s string) optional.Option[bool] {
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v, e := strconv.ParseBool(s)
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2021-10-12 14:11:35 -04:00
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if e != nil {
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2024-02-29 13:52:49 -05:00
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return optional.None[bool]()
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2021-10-12 14:11:35 -04:00
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}
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2024-02-29 13:52:49 -05:00
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return optional.Some(v)
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2021-10-12 14:11:35 -04:00
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}
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2019-01-21 06:45:32 -05:00
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// IsEmptyString checks if the provided string is empty
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func IsEmptyString(s string) bool {
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return len(strings.TrimSpace(s)) == 0
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}
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2019-11-12 21:27:11 -05:00
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// NormalizeEOL will convert Windows (CRLF) and Mac (CR) EOLs to UNIX (LF)
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func NormalizeEOL(input []byte) []byte {
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var right, left, pos int
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if right = bytes.IndexByte(input, '\r'); right == -1 {
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return input
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}
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length := len(input)
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tmp := make([]byte, length)
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// We know that left < length because otherwise right would be -1 from IndexByte.
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copy(tmp[pos:pos+right], input[left:left+right])
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pos += right
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tmp[pos] = '\n'
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left += right + 1
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pos++
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for left < length {
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if input[left] == '\n' {
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left++
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}
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right = bytes.IndexByte(input[left:], '\r')
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if right == -1 {
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copy(tmp[pos:], input[left:])
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pos += length - left
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break
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}
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copy(tmp[pos:pos+right], input[left:left+right])
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pos += right
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tmp[pos] = '\n'
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left += right + 1
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pos++
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}
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return tmp[:pos]
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}
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2020-11-25 06:20:40 -05:00
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2022-01-25 23:10:10 -05:00
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// CryptoRandomInt returns a crypto random integer between 0 and limit, inclusive
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func CryptoRandomInt(limit int64) (int64, error) {
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2022-01-04 10:13:52 -05:00
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rInt, err := rand.Int(rand.Reader, big.NewInt(limit))
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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if err != nil {
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return 0, err
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}
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2022-01-04 10:13:52 -05:00
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return rInt.Int64(), nil
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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}
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2022-01-25 23:10:10 -05:00
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const alphanumericalChars = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789"
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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2022-01-25 23:10:10 -05:00
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// CryptoRandomString generates a crypto random alphanumerical string, each byte is generated by [0,61] range
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func CryptoRandomString(length int64) (string, error) {
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buf := make([]byte, length)
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limit := int64(len(alphanumericalChars))
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for i := range buf {
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num, err := CryptoRandomInt(limit)
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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if err != nil {
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return "", err
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}
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2022-01-25 23:10:10 -05:00
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buf[i] = alphanumericalChars[num]
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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}
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2022-01-25 23:10:10 -05:00
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return string(buf), nil
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2021-05-10 02:45:17 -04:00
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}
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2022-01-04 10:13:52 -05:00
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2022-01-25 23:10:10 -05:00
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// CryptoRandomBytes generates `length` crypto bytes
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// This differs from CryptoRandomString, as each byte in CryptoRandomString is generated by [0,61] range
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// This function generates totally random bytes, each byte is generated by [0,255] range
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func CryptoRandomBytes(length int64) ([]byte, error) {
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buf := make([]byte, length)
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_, err := rand.Read(buf)
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return buf, err
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2022-01-04 10:13:52 -05:00
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}
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2022-02-01 07:59:25 -05:00
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// ToUpperASCII returns s with all ASCII letters mapped to their upper case.
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func ToUpperASCII(s string) string {
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b := []byte(s)
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for i, c := range b {
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if 'a' <= c && c <= 'z' {
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b[i] -= 'a' - 'A'
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}
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}
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return string(b)
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}
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2022-05-10 17:55:54 -04:00
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// ToTitleCase returns s with all english words capitalized
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func ToTitleCase(s string) string {
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2023-04-03 18:03:45 -04:00
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// `cases.Title` is not thread-safe, do not use global shared variable for it
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return cases.Title(language.English).String(s)
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2022-05-10 17:55:54 -04:00
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}
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2022-06-10 09:45:28 -04:00
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2023-04-03 18:03:45 -04:00
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// ToTitleCaseNoLower returns s with all english words capitalized without lower-casing
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2022-11-19 06:08:06 -05:00
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func ToTitleCaseNoLower(s string) string {
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2023-04-03 18:03:45 -04:00
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// `cases.Title` is not thread-safe, do not use global shared variable for it
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return cases.Title(language.English, cases.NoLower).String(s)
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2022-11-19 06:08:06 -05:00
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}
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2023-04-03 12:58:09 -04:00
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// ToInt64 transform a given int into int64.
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2023-07-04 14:36:08 -04:00
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func ToInt64(number any) (int64, error) {
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2022-06-12 08:08:23 -04:00
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var value int64
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switch v := number.(type) {
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case int:
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value = int64(v)
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case int8:
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value = int64(v)
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case int16:
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value = int64(v)
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case int32:
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value = int64(v)
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case int64:
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value = v
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Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927)
One of the proposals in #23328
This PR introduces a simple expression calculator
(templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations.
Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced
by this new approach.
Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth`
could all use this `Eval`.
And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves
readability.
Some examples:
----
* Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`
* After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}`
----
* Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}`
* After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}`
## FAQ
### Why not use an existing expression package?
We need a highly customized expression engine:
* do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling
* deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in
Golang template.
* make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly
* do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a
simple calculator.
* it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example,
Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd
packages don't do so.
### What's the benefit?
* Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions,
they were getting more and more.
Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases.
* The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`,
the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers
(eg, the Golang expression syntax).
* The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like
functions were never tested.
### The performance?
It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used
in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template.
### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable?
The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer
science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing
purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known.
The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
2023-04-07 09:25:49 -04:00
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2023-04-03 12:58:09 -04:00
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case uint:
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value = int64(v)
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case uint8:
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value = int64(v)
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case uint16:
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value = int64(v)
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case uint32:
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value = int64(v)
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case uint64:
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value = int64(v)
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Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927)
One of the proposals in #23328
This PR introduces a simple expression calculator
(templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations.
Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced
by this new approach.
Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth`
could all use this `Eval`.
And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves
readability.
Some examples:
----
* Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`
* After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}`
----
* Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}`
* After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}`
## FAQ
### Why not use an existing expression package?
We need a highly customized expression engine:
* do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling
* deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in
Golang template.
* make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly
* do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a
simple calculator.
* it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example,
Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd
packages don't do so.
### What's the benefit?
* Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions,
they were getting more and more.
Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases.
* The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`,
the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers
(eg, the Golang expression syntax).
* The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like
functions were never tested.
### The performance?
It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used
in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template.
### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable?
The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer
science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing
purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known.
The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
2023-04-07 09:25:49 -04:00
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case float32:
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value = int64(v)
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case float64:
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value = int64(v)
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2023-04-03 12:58:09 -04:00
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case string:
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var err error
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if value, err = strconv.ParseInt(v, 10, 64); err != nil {
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Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927)
One of the proposals in #23328
This PR introduces a simple expression calculator
(templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations.
Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced
by this new approach.
Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth`
could all use this `Eval`.
And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves
readability.
Some examples:
----
* Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`
* After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}`
----
* Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}`
* After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}`
## FAQ
### Why not use an existing expression package?
We need a highly customized expression engine:
* do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling
* deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in
Golang template.
* make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly
* do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a
simple calculator.
* it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example,
Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd
packages don't do so.
### What's the benefit?
* Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions,
they were getting more and more.
Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases.
* The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`,
the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers
(eg, the Golang expression syntax).
* The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like
functions were never tested.
### The performance?
It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used
in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template.
### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable?
The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer
science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing
purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known.
The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
2023-04-07 09:25:49 -04:00
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return 0, err
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}
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default:
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return 0, fmt.Errorf("unable to convert %v to int64", number)
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}
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return value, nil
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}
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// ToFloat64 transform a given int into float64.
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2023-07-04 14:36:08 -04:00
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func ToFloat64(number any) (float64, error) {
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Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927)
One of the proposals in #23328
This PR introduces a simple expression calculator
(templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations.
Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced
by this new approach.
Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth`
could all use this `Eval`.
And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves
readability.
Some examples:
----
* Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`
* After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}`
----
* Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}`
* After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}`
## FAQ
### Why not use an existing expression package?
We need a highly customized expression engine:
* do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling
* deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in
Golang template.
* make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly
* do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a
simple calculator.
* it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example,
Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd
packages don't do so.
### What's the benefit?
* Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions,
they were getting more and more.
Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases.
* The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`,
the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers
(eg, the Golang expression syntax).
* The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like
functions were never tested.
### The performance?
It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used
in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template.
### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable?
The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer
science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing
purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known.
The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
2023-04-07 09:25:49 -04:00
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var value float64
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switch v := number.(type) {
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case int:
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value = float64(v)
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case int8:
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value = float64(v)
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case int16:
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value = float64(v)
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case int32:
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value = float64(v)
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case int64:
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value = float64(v)
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case uint:
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value = float64(v)
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case uint8:
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value = float64(v)
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case uint16:
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value = float64(v)
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case uint32:
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value = float64(v)
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case uint64:
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value = float64(v)
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case float32:
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value = float64(v)
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case float64:
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value = v
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case string:
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var err error
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if value, err = strconv.ParseFloat(v, 64); err != nil {
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return 0, err
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2023-04-03 12:58:09 -04:00
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}
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default:
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Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927)
One of the proposals in #23328
This PR introduces a simple expression calculator
(templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations.
Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced
by this new approach.
Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth`
could all use this `Eval`.
And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves
readability.
Some examples:
----
* Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`
* After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}`
----
* Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}`
* After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}`
## FAQ
### Why not use an existing expression package?
We need a highly customized expression engine:
* do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling
* deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in
Golang template.
* make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly
* do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a
simple calculator.
* it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example,
Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd
packages don't do so.
### What's the benefit?
* Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions,
they were getting more and more.
Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases.
* The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`,
the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers
(eg, the Golang expression syntax).
* The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like
functions were never tested.
### The performance?
It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used
in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template.
### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable?
The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer
science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing
purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known.
The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
2023-04-07 09:25:49 -04:00
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return 0, fmt.Errorf("unable to convert %v to float64", number)
|
2022-06-12 08:08:23 -04:00
|
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}
|
Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927)
One of the proposals in #23328
This PR introduces a simple expression calculator
(templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations.
Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced
by this new approach.
Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth`
could all use this `Eval`.
And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves
readability.
Some examples:
----
* Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`
* After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}`
----
* Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}`
* After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}`
## FAQ
### Why not use an existing expression package?
We need a highly customized expression engine:
* do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling
* deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in
Golang template.
* make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly
* do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a
simple calculator.
* it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example,
Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd
packages don't do so.
### What's the benefit?
* Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions,
they were getting more and more.
Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases.
* The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`,
the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers
(eg, the Golang expression syntax).
* The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like
functions were never tested.
### The performance?
It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used
in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template.
### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable?
The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer
science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing
purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known.
The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
2023-04-07 09:25:49 -04:00
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return value, nil
|
2022-06-12 08:08:23 -04:00
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}
|
2023-07-07 01:31:56 -04:00
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// ToPointer returns the pointer of a copy of any given value
|
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func ToPointer[T any](val T) *T {
|
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|
return &val
|
|
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}
|
2024-03-13 21:10:51 -04:00
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2024-04-02 22:16:46 -04:00
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// Iif is an "inline-if", it returns "trueVal" if "condition" is true, otherwise "falseVal"
|
2024-04-07 07:17:06 -04:00
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func Iif[T any](condition bool, trueVal, falseVal T) T {
|
2024-04-02 22:16:46 -04:00
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if condition {
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return trueVal
|
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}
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return falseVal
|
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}
|
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|
2024-03-13 21:10:51 -04:00
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// IfZero returns "def" if "v" is a zero value, otherwise "v"
|
|
|
|
func IfZero[T comparable](v, def T) T {
|
|
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|
var zero T
|
|
|
|
if v == zero {
|
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return def
|
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}
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return v
|
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}
|
2024-03-28 16:40:35 -04:00
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2024-11-01 11:18:29 -04:00
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// OptionalArg helps the "optional argument" in Golang:
|
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//
|
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// func foo(optArg ...int) { return OptionalArg(optArg) }
|
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// calling `foo()` gets zero value 0, calling `foo(100)` gets 100
|
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// func bar(optArg ...int) { return OptionalArg(optArg, 42) }
|
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|
// calling `bar()` gets default value 42, calling `bar(100)` gets 100
|
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//
|
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// Passing more than 1 item to `optArg` or `defaultValue` is undefined behavior.
|
|
|
|
// At the moment only the first item is used.
|
|
|
|
func OptionalArg[T any](optArg []T, defaultValue ...T) (ret T) {
|
|
|
|
if len(optArg) >= 1 {
|
|
|
|
return optArg[0]
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if len(defaultValue) >= 1 {
|
|
|
|
return defaultValue[0]
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return ret
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2024-03-28 16:40:35 -04:00
|
|
|
func ReserveLineBreakForTextarea(input string) string {
|
|
|
|
// Since the content is from a form which is a textarea, the line endings are \r\n.
|
|
|
|
// It's a standard behavior of HTML.
|
|
|
|
// But we want to store them as \n like what GitHub does.
|
|
|
|
// And users are unlikely to really need to keep the \r.
|
|
|
|
// Other than this, we should respect the original content, even leading or trailing spaces.
|
|
|
|
return strings.ReplaceAll(input, "\r\n", "\n")
|
|
|
|
}
|